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Treating Varicose Veins
– It’s not what it used to be
by Bruce R. Hoyle, M.D.
When I reflect back to medical school
training, I remember having only one lecture on varicose veins. All I
remember from that lecture was to use compression hose and, when that didn’t
work, to send the patient to a surgeon for stripping. While compression hose
remains a cornerstone of treatment, a lot has changed in our understanding
and management of varicose veins and spiders (telangiectasias).
A Brief Review
Varicose veins are increasingly common
with age and by age 70, the prevalence is about 70 percent, with women being
affected almost twice as often as men. In addition, it should be noted that
heredity plays an important role. The baseline risk of developing varicose
veins in one's lifetime is about 20 percent. However the percentage rises
to 47 percent if one parent is affected and 89 percent if both parents have
the disease. Pregnancy is another important risk factor with a direct
relationship to parity. Occupations involving prolonged standing are also a
contributing factor.
The pathophysiology starts at the
cellular level, where smooth muscle cells degrade to a less contractile type
along with other degenerative changes in the vessel wall. The genetic nature
of this disease is evidenced by the fact that these changes continue even
when the smooth muscle cells are removed from the body and placed in tissue
culture. These changes ultimately affect the valves (remember them?) and
lead to reflux or the bidirectional flow of blood. In larger veins, the
increased hydrostatic pressure from the reflux ultimately causes dilation
and subsequent bulging varicosities.
It is important to stop here and mention
the other common cause of varicose veins: the post-phlebotic syndrome. After
a deep or superficial phlebitis, there is direct destruction of the valves
which potentially leads to chronic venous insufficiency. The importance of
the valves cannot be overstated. They are present in both the deep and
superficial veins in the lower leg as well as the perforating veins
connecting the two systems and are seen in veins as small as 1 mm.
Contractions of the calf muscle (pump) during walking are primarily what
propels the blood from the legs back to the heart.
New Developments – Diagnostic
Ultrasound
Of the new developments in the
management of varicose veins, the most significant is the use of diagnostic
ultrasound. Diagnostic ultrasound to evaluate arterial circulation and
diagnose DVT’s has been around for over 20 years, but has only recently been
applied to the superficial veins to determine reflux. In fact, even
ultrasound technicians are just beginning to receive training for the use of
ultrasound in this matter. If you want to evaluate a patient’s varicose
veins and send them to the hospital for a venous u-sound of the lower legs,
you are likely to get a report that only addresses the presence or absence
of a DVT.
As a result, many
doctors treating varicose veins have ultrasound units in their offices so
that they can do the exam themselves, as this helps determine treatment
options. Ultrasound has become the “gold standard” in evaluating varicose
veins and should always precede any surgical intervention.
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New
Therapies
There are several new therapies which I will touch on briefly now and
explore in more detail in the next issue.
Endovenous laser treatment (EVLT)
involves inserting a laser fiber in the vein and, under ultrasound guidance,
threading it into position, such as 1–2 cm below the sapheno-femoral
junction. The laser is then turned on. As the fiber is pulled back, the
laser causes a thermal injury to the intima or lining of the vein, resulting
in thrombosis or closure of the vessel. There is another device that works
on similar principle but uses radiofrequency energy instead of laser energy
to destroy the intima. These procedures are an alternative to stripping. In
veins that are not accessible to these devices, there are other new
interventions.
While Sclerotherapy has been
around for decades, there are newer solutions and new ways of delivering
these solutions. To treat deeper refluxing veins in the subcutaneous
tissues, a needle can be placed under ultrasound guidance into the vein and
a sclerosant injected. This is known as ultrasound guided sclerotherapy (USGS).
More visible bulging veins have been
traditionally stripped or avulsed through segmental incisions that are ¼ to
½ inch (6-12 mm) long. Ambulatory phlebectomy or micro phlebectomy
removes veins through incisions as small as 1-2 mm and can be done under
local anesthetic in an office surgery room. These incisions require no
sutures.
Finally, a few words on spider veins:
while they are considered cosmetic, spider veins are not exclusively so.
Yes, there are many patients (especially women) who come for treatment just
because they “don’t like to see them on their legs.” Not infrequently, they
will complain of symptoms such as burning pain which will be resolved with
treatment. Spiders are treated with either lasers (several wavelengths) or
sclerotherapy.
There are some medical treatments for
the symptoms of varicose veins and spiders. Horse chestnut extract is
available OTC and has been shown to increase venous wall tone and can help
with edema. Trental (pentoxyfilline), can reduce inflammation, and retard
the progression to ulceration.
In the next issue I will discuss all
newer treatments in more depth.
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